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Logitech Alto

By Alex Kidman on 06/02/2007

More Logitech reviews , RRP: AU$179.95

The good:

  • Solid notebook stand
  • Good quality keyboard
  • Adds three USB ports

The bad:

  • Doesn't lock notebooks in place
  • Easily becomes grubby
  • No integrated mouse solution

The bottomline:

Logitech's Alto offers an easy way to add a full-sized keyboard to your laptop while bringing the screen up to a more comfortable and ergonomic position.

Editors' rating:

8/10

Users' rating:

5.8/10

If the sales figures are to be believed, we're all in love with notebooks, and the future is mobile platforms. As useful as notebooks are, they do present challenges in everyday use, none more pressing than ergonomics. Notebook keyboards are often cramped affairs that are horrible for your wrists, and notebook displays are often plonked onto desks at an angle that positively encourages a sore neck, and possible permanent damage. The solution has long been to buy a dock for your laptop and use it with an external screen and more wrist-friendly keyboard. That's still a good solution, but it can be costly, and far too often docks are specific to particular vendors and even particular notebook lines.

Design and Features
The Alto combines a fairly standard Logitech keyboard with a notebook riser in a fold-down casing designed presumably to be somewhat portable. A rubber flap connects the notebook stand part to the keyboard, with a single USB cable that snakes around the base of the notebook stand when not in use. The stand also houses three USB 2.0 ports, with the idea being that while the keyboard aspect of the Alto takes away one of your laptop's precious USB ports, it gives back three in return. There's also a power socket at the back of the Alto, although the power adaptor isn't provided in the box; it's an added extra.

The platform that your notebook sits on folds out of the base of the Alto, with a stern warning to fix the foot of the stand properly to avoid your notebook slipping away. The Alto is designed to be compatible with as many notebooks as possible, so there's no custom moulding for any specific notebook. This is a plus in terms of cross-compatibility -- and does mean you can use the Alto with multiple notebooks within a household or small office, which isn't true of too many docking solutions -- but it's also a design minus, in that unlike a dedicated dock, there's no specific part holding your notebook in place when it's mounted on the Alto. It's still secure by force of gravity and the angle it sits on, but it does invite being knocked off if you're not careful.

Performance
Setting up the Alto simply involves unfolding it, clicking the stand into place, popping a suitable laptop onto the stand and plugging the USB cable into place. The keyboard is driverless for both Windows XP and Mac platforms -- although we did have to quickly identify the keyboard layout for OS X's purposes. Adding an external keyboard to a laptop is, of course, no big thing and no revelation, and while the Alto's keyboard is reasonable -- and has a nice supporting wrist rest -- the big advantage that the Alto boasts is that it props your laptop screen up to your eyeline when you're sitting down, which is a lot better for your posture and a lot more comfortable to boot.

There are some downsides to the Alto, although they are relatively minor. Because of the placement of your laptop, the trackpad/trackpoint becomes essentially unworkable -- you'll risk wobbling your notebook off if you use it too much -- and there's no inbuilt trackpad replacement or trackball on the Alto itself. A more cynical reviewer might suggest that Logitech want you to buy a Logitech mouse to go with the Alto, but that could never happen -- could it?

The other downside is an aesthetic one, and it's a risk that's all to common with glossy black devices. The Alto picks up smudges at a rate of knots, especially as it's a device designed to be used with your hands. Even the rubber flap that connects the stand and keyboard isn't immune to this, as we found in our testing that it quickly picked up stray bits of grot and started to look distinctly less shiny.

If you're running multiple laptops and don't want a dock -- and LCD display -- for each of them, then the Alto is a good, portable solution that's well built and serves its intended purpose well enough. It's not recommended if objects on your desk are constantly in motion, simply because it doesn't lock your notebook in place, but aside from that it's a very well made solution to a very common problem.

commtech
04/05/2008, 07:25 PM

rating
5
/10

Not for Toshiba Satellite users either - or a lot of notebooks I suspect. I bought this for my 15" A200 - but the angle of incline is so steep (Like Bob) I find even with the laptop fully open the screen is still tilted several degrees FORWARD of vertical. I am sure it is far from the claim on the box of "suits virtually all notebooks".

Pros: It works well with my DELL.

Cons: I wanted it to work with my Toshiba.

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canberra_photographer
canberra_photographer
20/02/2008, 11:16 PM

rating
6
/10

Not compatible with Mac OS, Logitech makes this clear. For Windows though, it works great. However, quite heavy and easily gets filthy just from dust much less grazing while using it.

Pros: Study and works well for Windows

Cons: No Mac OS support
Easily dirty

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pfleming
08/08/2007, 04:19 PM

rating
7
/10

like it, light enough to bring in my mobie LAP Top case. Like the fact I do nto have to have a SUB port thing in my laptop

Pros: neat, light, inbuit USB's,

Cons: my thnkpad occasionally slips off the ridge, could see how this might be a problem for some laptops.

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Bob
23/02/2007, 02:42 PM

rating
5
/10

Not for Macbook Pro users. I bought one of these for my 15" MBP, and the screen doesn't bend back enough to put the screen at eye level and vertical - instead I have to look at it with the top tilted toward me slightly, and the laptop resting above the function keys, not in the rest it's supposed to.

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